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New screening guidelines for women at
high risk for Breast Cancer
Newswise — New
guidelines from the American Cancer Society
(ACS) recommend that women at very high risk
for breast cancer receive magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) along with annual mammography,
reports the October 2007 issue of Harvard
Women’s Health Watch.
In one recent study
comparing MRI, mammography, and ultrasound
in 171 women whose lifetime risk of breast
cancer was very high (20% or more), MRI
proved best at finding cancer. Of the six
cancers diagnosed, MRI detected all six,
mammography only two, and ultrasound only
one. Only MRI detected the four cancers
found in women with dense breast tissue.
Even so, the ACS and
other groups don’t recommend routine MRI
screening for women at average risk, for
reasons such as these:
• It leads to too many
unnecessary biopsies. MRI picks up any
abnormal tissue, whether cancerous or not.
• Mammography is getting better all the
time. Digital mammography works better than
traditional mammography in women with dense
breast tissue and is becoming increasingly
available.
• MRI has limitations. It can’t be performed
on women with pacemakers or implantable
cardioverter-defibrillators, and its ability
to detect some early cancers is limited. It
also isn’t widely available.
• It’s expensive. And insurance won’t pay
for it for women at average risk.
• It’s unclear whether MRI helps women live
longer. The most important outcome of any
screening test is improved survival. We
don’t know yet if using MRI helps women live
longer.
For most woman over 40,
having an annual mammogram and clinical
breast exam is still the best way to catch
early-stage, highly treatable cancers, says
Harvard Women’s Health Watch.
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